Nintendo DS Review: Phoenix Wright Ace Attorney: Trials and Tribulations - Page 2

Author: MerylPublished: Dec 05, 2007 at 7:12 am 0 comments

When it comes trial time, every witness presents testimony and then you — as Phoenix Wright or Mia Fey — conducts cross-examinations to discover gaps and lies. During the cross-examination, the witness will repeat each line — one-by-one — to give you a chance to object, press for more information, present evidence that contradicts the witness' statement, or let it go. A standard statement appears with each response, such as "Hold it!" when pressing or "Take that!" when presenting evidence. This also adds to the tediousness of the game. You can also use your voice in objections, but it's not required — thankfully. A person with imperfect speech — like this writer — might struggle to be heard correctly.

Two spirit healers accompany Phoenix. One is Maya, Mia Fey's younger sister, and the other is Pearl Fey, their cousin. Pearl easily gets on your nerves like a kid sister while Maya's immaturity can grate at times. Nevertheless, the girls have good moments when they come shining through. This says a lot about the game's characters and their uniqueness. It would help to have another likeable character or two — like Mia Fey — that don't annoy players in the next edition.

Since Phoenix Wright Ace Attorney: Trials and Tribulations involves logical thinking and a good eye, it should attract players who prefer Nintendo's Touch! Generation games such as Big Brain Academy, Picross DS, and Touchmaster. Like those, this one is easy to learn and use especially since a tutorial helps players get familiar with the interface.

Using sharp anime-style images and animation, the game presents everything with a first person perspective making players feel part of the action. After successfully winning all five cases, there may be little motivation to play the cases again. Thankfully, they last a long time, making the game worth its value. Though the game receives a few objections over its annoyances, it's guilty of being entertaining, humorous, and getting players to use their brains. Those who want to be lawyers someday or watch TV shows like Perry Mason, Matlock, Boston Legal, or Law and Order will enjoy the playing the role without cracking open a law book.

Phoenix Wright, Ace Attorney: Trials and Tribulations is rated T (Teen) by the ESRB for Mild Blood, Mild Violence.


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Article Author: Meryl

Meryl K. Evans is the content maven (AKA writer, editor, researcher, word gal, CEO, and UFO) behind meryl.net. She's the author of Brilliant Outlook Pocketbook and co-author of Adapting Web Standards. Meryl has been blogging since June 2000. …

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